A viral joke about The Lion King's opening chant just snowballed into a US$20 million lawsuit filed by the man who actually recorded it.
Lebo M is suing a Zimbabwean comedian
Lebo M is suing a Zimbabwean comedian
- Lebohang Morake, a.k.a. Lebo M, filed suit in a US federal court.
- Zimbabwean comedian Learnmore Mwanyenyeka Jonasi is the defendant.
- Allegations cover misrepresentation, defamation, and cultural misappropriation.
- The lawsuit is reportedly valued at US$20 million.
- Jonasi joked that the famous chant just means a lion showed up.
- His casual translation blew up across social media fast.
- Viewers found it hilarious, but Lebo M was not amused.
- The Grammy-winning composer publicly disputed the interpretation.
- Lebo M says the chant is traditional Zulu and Xhosa royal-praise poetry.
- He described it as a proclamation tied to kingship and ancestry.
- Stripping it from that framework erases its deeper significance.
- His publicity manager called it heritage, not a hashtag-ready punchline.
- Jonasi reportedly responded with a video defending his position.
- He indicated a willingness to learn from the situation.
- The dispute has drawn global attention to the chant's origins.
- Legal proceedings in the US federal court are apparently underway.